Sunday, 9 December 2012

Inception review


In a world where technology exists to enter the human mind through dream invasion, a highly skilled thief is given a final chance at redemption which involves executing his toughest job to date: Inception.The dream consists of the dreamer, who is the person whose dream you’re actually in. Every dream level must have a dreamer. In the case of planting the inception in Fischer Jr.’s mind: Yusuf is the first level’s dreamer, Arthur is the second level’s dreamer, and Eames is the third level’s dreamer.

Each dream also consists of a subject, usually the person whose subconscious you’re trying to extract information from. This person is usually not aware that he or she is dreaming, unless something out of the ordinary happens to tip him or her off. The subject clutters the dream with projects, people created by the subject’s subconscious. When the subject begins to realize he’s in someone else’s dream, his projections become violent towards the dreamer.

 
Also, there is an architect involved, who is in charge of constructing the dream world. It’s the architect’s job to make the world as real as possible, full of details and paradoxes so the subject and the projections don’t realize they’re in someone else’s dream.

If you die inside of a dream, you wake up. This is the usual case, though during the heist that involved a powerful sedative from Yusuf and the many layers of dreaming the team climbed through, that wasn’t the case. For that instance, if someone died they would fall into Limbo. That is explained later on.



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